bar chair
English

Wooden bar chairs.
Alternative forms
- barchair
Noun
bar chair (plural bar chairs)
- A tall chair-like seat usually having a foot rest, commonly placed in bars and in front of kitchen counters.
- Synonym: bar stool
- 2005, Buff Brazy Given, Simon’s Story: A Novel, [sine loco]: Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN, page 161:
- He ordered a Corona, stretched and groaned as he lowered himself into a too small bar chair.
- 2005, R. J. Grubb, Mordray’s Whale, New York/Lincoln/Shanghai: iUniverse, Inc., →ISBN, page 130:
- Bar chairs were heavy with high backs that prevented many a drunk’s reverse gainer.
- 2013, John Dufresne, No Regrets, Coyote, New York/London: W.W. Norton & Company, →ISBN, (eBook):
- The door was guarded by a retired cop named Frankie the Golfer, who sat by the door in an upholstered bar chair that he leaned back against the wall.
- 2013, Richard Rose, The Lazarus Conspiracies, Honolulu, HI, USA: Savant Books, →ISBN, page 154:
- Roy pulled his bulk off the bar chair. Joe held it for Megan, who had to step onto the bar rail to lift herself onto the chair.
Descendants
- → Japanese: バーチェアー (bācheā) / → Japanese: ばーちぇあー (bācheā)
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